My son, age 9, and I have a running joke. When his sister and mom make plans, leaving us guys on our own, and we discuss what weโre going to do, the answer is always, โget a pizza, drink some beer, guy stuff โฆโ and other nonsense. Maybe itโs not as funny written out here. We rarely actually do anything of the sortโwell, he doesnโt, at least not the beerโitโs just fun pretending weโre going to do the most stereotypical guy stuff possible.
As it turns out, actually doing that stuff is pretty great. I needed to console the sting of his sister attending her first concert with their favorite aunt, so we thought maybe shooting some pool and getting a pizza would make a good guysโ night. Destination: Mellow Fellow of Reno (as opposed to the Truckee or Virginia City locationsโthe original Kings Beach site closed last year).
Tucked in the ground floor of a parking/office structure on East Second Street across from Greater Nevada Field, Mellow Fellow occupies the site of the former Silver Peak pizza joint, Slice of the Peak. I often wondered whether the busy baseball season would be enough to sustain business year-round on the lightly trafficked block. With more than just pizza and beer for baseball fans, Mellow Fellow appears to have a formula successful enough to carry them through the off months.
Walking up, Mellow Fellow appears divided, one side restaurant-style table seating and the other more traditional bar. The bar side also has several long tables for dining or communal drinking, a couple of cushy couches, and a pool table, delightfully free of charge. The division gave me pause as I wasnโt sure if minors were limited to the dining side. After struggling to get the attention of a bartender, feeling invisible while hovering awkwardly behind other patrons, I finally focused my laser-like eye contact and confirmed it was fine for the boy to join me.
This is a temple to beer, from the wall of bottles to the barrel staves and barley stalks decorating the room. The draft selection is top notch, filling a giant chalkboard dominating the wall above the kitchen. With menu options roughly categorized by styles like lighter, darker and hoppy, it was easy to find things I likedโbut hard to decide. I settled on a new IPA from local Lead Dog, one of just a few local beers available. Besides the draft list, two glass-doored coolers held a beer geek buffet of bottles and cans, the best kind of window shopping for obsessive craft beer fans. This broad, top-shelf selection of beer is probably a factor in Mellow Fellowโs success, hosting regular events like โall you can drinkโ nights dedicated to a single craft breweryโs beers.
The bar wasnโt terribly crowded, but a mix of customers mostly filled the barโeating, drinking, and generally making merry.
After half-assedly dominating the pool table, thenโmuch to my sidekickโs delightโscratching on the eight ball, I offered the choice of eating there or proceeding with our pizza plan. While I could happily have stayed and ordered something from the attractive menu of modern gastropub food to go with a second beer, sadly, a $5 Hot-n-Ready was firmly in my sonโs sights, and he would not be deterred.
